Wings-Wings Greatest
Wings-Wings Greatest
Wings-Wings Greatest
Vintage Vibes 420

Wings-Wings Greatest

Regular price $45.00 $0.00 Unit price per
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Wings-Wings Greatest

Cover has normal wear and tear for the age. Cover is graded VG. Record is graded VG. INCLUDES POSTER!!

Wings Greatest is a 1978 compilation album by the British–American rock band Wings and their eighth album as well as Paul McCartney’s tenth since leaving the Beatles. It was the band’s last release through Capitol in the US. The album is notable as being the first official retrospective release from McCartney’s post-Beatles career.

The album was compiled after McCartney’s decision to leave EMI’s American label, Capitol, for a six-year stay with Columbia (United States and Canada only), though he remained with EMI worldwide during his US sabbatical from Capitol. Four of the twelve tracks make their album debut with this compilation: “Another Day”, “Junior’s Farm”, “Hi, Hi, Hi” and “Mull of Kintyre”. “Live and Let Die” had previously appeared on the soundtrack album of the same name but did not appear on any previous McCartney albums.

All but two tracks were credited as “Wings” or “Paul McCartney & Wings”; the exceptions being “Another Day” (a non-album single credited to just “Paul McCartney”) and “Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey” (credited to “Paul & Linda McCartney”) from their 1971 album Ram.

Despite the fact that McCartney had amassed enough successful singles by late 1978 to potentially fill a double album, he opted to release Wings Greatest as a single disc for commercial reasons. Thus, several songs would be overlooked for Wings Greatest. Indeed, not one song was excerpted from 1975’s Venus and Mars, despite “Listen to What the Man Said” being a number 1 US hit. The album was promoted by a TV commercial in the UK, which featured several members of the public (played by actors) singing Wings tunes in public places. At the end a dustman, waiting in his lorry at a set of traffic lights (in Abbey Road), sings to himself an out of tune rendition of “Band on the Run”, at which point Paul, Linda and Denny pull up alongside and Paul shouts out “You’re a bit flat mate!”. The driver leans out his window and says “Funny, I only checked them this morning!”

The Bulgarian pressings of the album did not include the song “Live and Let Die”.